GPU Mining Come to the terrible retaliation that gpu mining is not profitable in Australia anymore |
- Come to the terrible retaliation that gpu mining is not profitable in Australia anymore
- What do you guys think of this pre-built rig? $100 off coupon code "quantum"
- Better to join a pool or let a program pick the currency for you
- GPU Benchmark page
- Getting rejected shares with XFX RX580
- Power Consumption Question
- Water-cooling 16 1080tis
Come to the terrible retaliation that gpu mining is not profitable in Australia anymore Posted: 04 Aug 2018 11:32 PM PDT Using the website what to mine and using my price per kwh of 0.293kw/h I found its almost impossible to get profit no matter what gpu I use would my only possibility be cloud mining if not any other options I really wanted to Cryptomine edit: just realized that google auto corrected my title sorry I meant realization no retaliation [link] [comments] | ||
What do you guys think of this pre-built rig? $100 off coupon code "quantum" Posted: 05 Aug 2018 07:21 AM PDT
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Better to join a pool or let a program pick the currency for you Posted: 05 Aug 2018 06:31 AM PDT Is it more effective to join a pool directly (such as cudaminer) or use a program that picks the most effective currency to mine for you (such as nicehash or minergate)? [link] [comments] | ||
Posted: 05 Aug 2018 06:18 AM PDT Hey, I have released GPU benchmark tool for many gpu-s (Windows/Linux). [link] [comments] | ||
Getting rejected shares with XFX RX580 Posted: 05 Aug 2018 05:24 AM PDT Hey everyone! One of my rigs, running HiveOS, have six XFX RX580 XXX 8Gb graphic cards (5 Samsung and 1 Hynix), all set to compute mode (with hardware switch) without any additional overclock or custom BIOS. ( for some reason these cards can't handle any overclock without crashing :( ). I'm pulling an average of 30MH/s per card - it also depends on the memory manufactor. Last month, the rig was stable with a rate of 99.9x% accepted shares. But since llast week we're having a heatwave (temperatures above 40 degrees Celsius) and I'm getting around 5-10% rejected shares, coming from two particular cards. All the cards are running between 70-74 degrees, and the fan speed are all near 100% at this moment, due to the environmental heat. My question is if this high number of rejected shares might be related with this heatwave, and if you guys have any suggestion that doesn't involve A/C (we have our rigs running on a big warehouse, we can't effectively use A/C to cool it down) to prevent/address this high amount of rejected shares. It might be related, but I feel like these fans are not working at full speed, even when they report 100% speed. If the fan speed on this GPU is below 30%, the fans simply don't spin, and having them at 100% it feels like it could go faster. Anyone using these cards felt the same? All my other rigs with different cards (Sapphire RX570) are not having this issue. [link] [comments] | ||
Posted: 05 Aug 2018 12:31 AM PDT Hi, I have two 1000w PSU jointly powering 6 1080 TIs. I currently have one kill-a-watt meter, do I need two meters to measure both of them? Or can I just assume that they're consuming the equal amount of power and I can just factor that into the kWh/cost equation? I think I'd like to avoid plugging both power supplies into a surge protector and then from that surge protector into the kill-a-watt, but please let me know if that's ok to do. What's suggest to monitor electricity for two 1000w PSU? [link] [comments] | ||
Posted: 05 Aug 2018 02:07 AM PDT I am fully aware this is not cost effective. I have a little idea/project in mind where the rigs heat water and do something productive with the heat. Its completely hypothetical at this point in time. I would do some kind of dual loop with radiators passing the heat to running water to avoid corrosion. My issue is that any gpu waterblocks I have looked at are around £100 (UK). It there any way I can safely reduce this cost? Even getting a block for £10 less makes a huge difference when buying 16 of them. I've seen some cheaper, but they only watercool the chip and not the vram (I don't know if that's necessary, the heatsink was large so I assume not). Has anyone water cooled a 1080ti or mining rig before? I believe they are the standard pcb. I have already got my money back on this hardware, so it is just another fun project for me. [link] [comments] |
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